Method of making core shell structured articles based on alumina ceramics having spinel surfaces

ABSTRACT

An alumina ceramic article and a method for preparing the article. The method comprises the steps of: 
     (1) Compacting a mixture of a first concentration of particulate aluminum oxide sufficient to prevent retention of the zirconium oxide alloy particles in the shell in a predominantly tetragonal crystal structure and a second concentration of particulate zirconium oxide alloy. The zirconium oxide alloy is zirconium oxide and a secondary oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, CaO, Y 2  O 3 , Sc 2  O 3 , CeO 2 , and rare earth oxides having a concentration of secondary oxide generally of about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent Y 2  O 3 , from about 0.1 to about 1 mole percent MgO, from about 0.5 to about 15 mole percent CeO 2 , from about 0.5 to about 7.0 mole percent Sc 2  O 3 , or from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent CaO, relative to the total of the zirconium oxide alloy. The compacting results in the formation of a blank. 
     (2) Providing contact between the blank and a dopant oxide. 
     (3) Sintering the blank in contact with the dopant oxide wherein said first concentration is from 50-75 weight percent of the total of the first and second concentrations.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention pert as to ceramic items and methods for preparing ceramic items and more particularly pertains to an alumina ceramic article having a core that is predominantly α-alumina and a shell that is predominantly cubic spinel.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the production of materials such as photographic films and papers; cutting tools, such as perforators and slitter knives, require impact resistance to eliminate catastrophic failures and corrosion, and wear and abrasion resistance to improve service life and productivity. Conventional cutting tool materials, such as high speed steels, hardenable stainless steels, and cemented tungsten carbides, meet some of these requirements but have considerable limitations to warrant improved service life. Conventional cutting tool materials, such as high speed steels, hardenable stainless steels, and cemented tungsten carbides, meet some of these requirements but have the limitation of requiring frequent maintenance due to wear.

Ytrria-doped tetragonal zirconia polycrystal (Y-TZP) ceramic materials offer many advantages over conventional materials and are therefore used in cutting, perforating, slitting and chopping of photographic film and paper webs. Y-TZP is one of the toughest ceramics. The toughness is achieved at the expense of hardness and strength. Tetragonal zirconia alloy-alumina composite, that is, the product of sintering a particulate mixture of zirconia alloy and alumina, is another tough and relatively soft structural composite. Tetragonal zirconia alloy-alumina composite has tribological properties that are not as attractive as other high performance structural ceramics like SiC and Si₃ N₄. An example of a material having good hardness and strength is monolithic cubic spinel, however, this material has unusually high brittleness and is unusable for structural applications.

It is known that impact bearing tools or parts have a longer service life and better performance if made with a core of a tough material and a surface or shell of a hard material. Common examples include nitrided or case carburized metal tool parts, camshafts and the like. A surface treatment such as carburizing or nitriding is used to form a stable hard phase over a tougher core. The phase changes are dependent upon the reactivity of the parent metallic material with a reacting material, for example, a carbon or nitrogen species. In ceramics, inherent chemical inertness has impeded the preparation of comparable composite structures. Ceramic articles having surface areas with stress induced phase changes are very easy to achieve, since such phase changes occur as a result of abrasion on working surfaces during use. With Y-TZP, stress induces transformation from a tough, but not very hard tetragonal phase to a harder monoclinic phase. This phase change can be utilized in different ways. Net shape tetragonal zirconia alloy articles can be produced as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,290,332. The term "net shape" is defined as a ceramic article that is dimensionally true after sintering and therefore does not necessitate further machining prior to use in its intended working environment. During use, working surfaces of a net shape article will be subject to phase transformation. Suitable tolerances will permit abrasion losses at working surfaces, prior to phase transformation, to be ignored. Alternatively, phase transformation to monoclinic zirconia can be induced by an abrading process, such as grinding or lapping, during fabrication of the tool. Neither approach is straight-forward in that two variables, the dimensions of the article and its phase characteristics are changing simultaneously. Both approaches are extremely problematic when attempted with an article having a complex geometry.

An alternative approach is taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,358,913; which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. In that approach, a tetragonal zirconia alloy article, which can be near net shape, is compacted and then sintered in the presence of an MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, Sc₂ O₃, CeO₂, or rare earth oxide dopants and their combinations thereof to produce an article having a tetragonal core and a cubic phase shell. The dopant can be provided in a number of different forms such as a solid plate, a powder, or a layer produced by decomposition of an organo-metallic precursor film. In U.S. patent application No. 07/994,820 now abandoned in favor of Continuation-in-Part application Ser. No. 08/231,870, filed Apr. 25, 1994 and Divisional application Ser. No. 08/506,629 filed 25 Jul. 1995; a method is described for producing articles having a tetragonal zirconia alloy core and a monoclinic shell. In U.S. patent application No. 07/994,818 now abandoned in favor of a Continuation-in-Part application Ser. No. 08/400,416, filed 03 Mar. 1995, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference; a method is described for producing articles having a tetragonal zirconia alloy and alumina core and a shell of tetragonal zirconia and cubic spinel. In the core and the shell the predominant species is tetragonal zirconia. The application also teaches a method for producing articles having a core that is tetragonal zirconia alloy along with less than about 5 weight percent alumina and having a shell that is cubic phase zirconia and cubic spinel.

Alpha-phase alumina is harder than tetragonal zirconia. Spinel is harder than α-alumina and about as hard as cubic zirconia.

In U.S. patent application No. 08/398,331 filed Mar. 3, 1995, now abandoned in favor of 08/670,058 filed Jun. 25, 1996 by common inventors with this application and commonly assigned with this application, a method is described comprising the steps of compacting a mixture of a first concentration of particulate aluminum oxide and a second concentration of particulate zirconium oxide alloy, said zirconium oxide alloy consisting essentially of zirconium oxide and a secondary oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, Sc₂ O₃, and rare earth oxides, said zirconium oxide alloy has a concentration of said secondary oxide of about 2 to about 20 mole percent relative to the total of said zirconium oxide alloy, said compacting further comprising forming a blank; providing contact between said blank and a dopant oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, ZnO, FeO, CoO, NiO, and MnO, said providing being subsequent to said forming of said blank; and sintering said blank in contact with said dopant oxide, said sintering further comprising diffusing said dopant oxide into the surface of said blank, converting said aluminum oxide particles in said surface into cubic spinel, and converting said zirconium oxide alloy particles in said surface from a tetragonal crystal structure to cubic and monoclinic crystal structures; wherein said first concentration is greater than 50 weight percent of the total of said first and second concentrations, and wherein said first concentration is sufficient to prevent retention of said zirconium oxide alloy particles in said surface in a predominantly tetragonal crystal structure; whereby said prepared ceramic article has a core consisting essentially of sintered particles of (1) said zirconium oxide alloy in a tetragonal crystal structure and (2) aluminum oxide, and a shell comprising sintered particles of (a) zirconium oxide alloy in non-tetragonal crystal structures and (b) cubic spinel. This application describes a process wherein the first concentration is for 0 to less than 50 weight percent or greater than 75 weight percent of the total of the first and second concentrations.

It would be desirable to provide a method for producing articles that provide a core that is predominantly alumina and a shell that is predominantly cubic spinel from materials not contemplated in the aforementioned patent application.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In the broader aspects of the method for preparing ceramic articles of the invention, there is provided an alumina ceramic article and a method for preparing the article. The method has the steps of:

(1) Compacting a mixture of a first concentration of particulate aluminum oxide and a second concentration of particulate zirconium oxide alloy. The first concentration is greater than 50 weight percent of the total of the first and second concentrations. The first concentration is sufficient to prevent retention of the zirconium oxide alloy particles in the shell in a predominantly tetragonal crystal structure. The zirconium oxide alloy is zirconium oxide and a secondary oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, CeO₂, Sc₂ O₃, rare earth oxides and a mixture of secondary oxides. The zirconium oxide alloy has a concentration of secondary oxide of, in the case of Y₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent; in the case of MgO, about 0.1 to about 1.0 mole percent, in the case of CeO₂, about 0.5 to about 15 mole percent, in the case of Sc₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 7.0 mole percent and in the case of CaO from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent relative to the total of zirconium oxide alloy. The compacting results in the formation of a blank.

(2) Subsequent to formation of the blank, providing contact between the blank and a dopant oxide selected from MgO, ZnO, FeO, CoO, NiO, and MnO.

(3) Sintering the blank in contact with the dopant oxide. During the sintering the dopant oxide diffuses into the surface of the blank, converting the aluminum oxide particles in the shell into cubic spinel, the composite of which is MgAl₂ O₄ if the dopant oxide is MgO and ZnAl₂ O₄ if the dopant oxide is zinc oxide, etc. and converting the zirconium oxide alloy particles in the shell from a tetragonal crystal structure to cubic and monoclinic crystal structures wherein said first concentration is from 50 weight percent of the total of the first and second concentrations to 75 weight percent of the total of said first and second concentrations.

The ceramic article has a core that is predominantly alumina and a shell that is predominantly cubic spinel. The core is sintered particles of aluminum oxide or of aluminum oxide and zirconium oxide alloy in a tetragonal crystal structure. The surface or shell is sintered particles of cubic spinel or cubic spinel and zirconium oxide alloy in non-tetragonal crystal structures.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The above-mentioned and other features and objects of this invention and the manner of attaining them will become more apparent and the invention itself will be better understood by reference to the following description of an embodiment of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing wherein:

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of the method of the invention;

FIG. 2 is a fragmentary, cross-sectional view of a die press useful in the method of the invention;

FIG. 3 is an enlarged cross-sectional view of the mold and die assembly of the die press of FIG. 2; and

FIG. 4 is an enlarged schematic view of a ceramic perforator punch according to the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF A SPECIFIC EMBODIMENT

In the methods of the invention, particulate aluminum oxide or a mixture of a major portion of particulate aluminum oxide and a minor portion of particulate zirconia alloy, is compacted and sintered. The sintering is performed in the presence of a dopant selected from: MgO, FeO, ZnO, NiO, and MnO, and combination thereof, as discussed below in detail. The resulting alumina ceramic article of the invention has a shell of alumina or alumina and tetragonal zirconia alloy and a shell of cubic spinel or cubic spinel along with cubic structure or cubic and monoclinic structure zirconia alloy.

The methods of the invention utilize particulate alumina and particulate alloys of ZrO₂ and additional "secondary oxide" selected from: MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, Sc₂ O₃ and CeO₂ and other rare earth oxides (also referred to herein as "Mg-Ca-Y-Sc-rare earth oxides"). Zirconia alloys useful in the methods of the invention have a metastable tetragonal crystal structure in the temperature and pressure ranges at which the ceramic article produced will be used. For example, at temperatures up to about 200° C. and pressures up to about 1000 MPa, zirconia alloys having about, in the case of Y₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent; in the case of MgO, about 0.1 to about 1.0 mole percent, in the case of CeO₂, about 0.5 to about 15 mole percent, in the case of Sc₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 7.0 mole percent and in the case of CaO from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent relative to the total of zirconium oxide alloy. Preferred oxides for alloying with zirconia are Y₂ O₃, MgO, CaO, CeO₂, Sc₂ O₃, rare earth oxides and combinations of these oxides. It is preferred that the zirconia powder have high purity, greater than about 99.9 percent. Specific examples of useful zirconia alloys include: tetragonal structure zirconia alloys having from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent and preferably about 2 to about 5 mole percent Y₂ O₃, or more preferably about 3 mole percent Y₂ O₃. In the case of MgO, 0.1 to 1.0 mole percent provides tetragonal structure and for CeO₂, 0.5 to 15 mole percent provides tetragonal structure, calcium oxide of 0.5 to about 5 mole percent produces a tetragonal structure and Sc₂ O₃ at about 0.5 mole percent to 7.0 mole percent produces a tetragonal structure. Examples of tetragonal structure zirconia alloys useful in the methods of the invention are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,290,332 and 5,411,690. Such zirconia alloys are described in those patents as being useful to provide a "net shape" ceramic article: a ceramic article that is dimensionally true after sintering and therefore does not necessitate further machining prior to use in its intended working environment.

FIG. 1, diagrammatically illustrates the alloying process. Zirconia powder 100 is combined with one or more secondary oxide powders 102 to provide zirconia alloy powder 104. The preparation of zirconia alloys is well known to those skilled in the art and zirconia alloys are available commercially. For example, particulate zirconia alloy having 3 mole percent Y₂ O₃ is marketed by Z-TECH Corporation, Bow, N.H., as "SYP-ULTRA 5.2 Yttria Stabilized Zirconia".

The grain and agglomeration sizes and distributions, moisture contents, and binders (if any) can be varied in both the alumina and the zirconia alloy, in a manner known to those skilled in the art. "Grain" is defined as an individual crystal, which may be within a particle, having a spatial orientation that is distinct from that of adjacent grains. "Agglomerate" is defined as an aggregation of individual particles, each of which may comprise multiple grains. In a particular embodiment of the invention, the grain and agglomeration sizes and distributions, and moisture contents of the alumina and the zirconia alloy are substantially the same and are selected as if the zirconia alloy was not going to be mixed with the alumina, that is in a manner known to the art to be suitable for the preparation of a zirconia alloy article.

An example of convenient particulate characteristics for a particular embodiment of the invention is the following. Purity is preferably well controlled at 99.9 to 99.99 percent, that is, impurities are no more than about 0.1 to 0.01 percent. The grain size is from about 0.1 micrometers to about 0.6 micrometers. The average grain size is 0.3 micrometers. The distribution of grain sizes is: 5-15 percent less than 0.1 micrometers, 40-60 percent less than 0.3 micrometers, and 85-95 percent less than 0.6 micrometers. The surface area of each individual grain ranges from about 10 to about 15 m² /gram or is preferably 14 m² /gram. Agglomerate size is from about 30 to about 60 micrometers and average agglomerate size is 40-60 micrometers. Moisture content is about 0.2 to 1.0 percent by volume of blank and is preferably 0.5 percent. The mixture of particulates is compacted in the presence of a binder such as gelatin or polyvinyl ionomer or more preferably polyvinyl alcohol. The binder is added to and mixed in with the particulate mixture, for example by spraying or ball milling prior to placement of the powder mixture in a compacting device.

Step "A" in FIG. 1, diagrammatically illustrates the mixing of the particulate zirconia alloy 104 and the particulate aluminum oxide 103. The mixing can be mechanical or alternatively can be chemical, for example, mixing by coprecipitation. The particulate mixture formed is from about 75 to 100 percent by weight (weight/total weight of particulate mixture) Al₂ O₃, and preferably is from about 80 to about 99 percent by weight Al₂ O₃, or more preferably is from about 80 to about 95 percent by weight Al₂ O₃.

The particulate mixture of zirconia alloy and alumina 104 is compacted; heated to a temperature range at which sintering will occur; sintered, that is, maintained at that temperature range for a period of time; and then cooled. During all or part of sintering, the particulate mixture is in contact with dopant, as discussed below in detail. In FIG. 1, element 106 represents the product of both mixing and compaction, indicated by arrow "B". Compaction and sintering are generally discussed herein as two consecutive operations, as indicated by "B" and "C" in FIG. 1, however, the invention is not limited to a particular sequence of compacting and sintering. For example, compaction and sintering can be simultaneous in a single operation or partial compaction can be followed by sintering and further compaction. The interim product of compacting and sintering operations is referred to herein as a "blank", which is illustrated as element 108 in FIG. 1. Blank 108 is at least partially compacted and is either unsintered or not fully sintered.

Completion of compacting and sintering provides the finished alumina ceramic article 108, which has a core 112 substantially composed of alumina or alumina and tetragonal structure zirconia alloy and a shell or surface 110 substantially composed of cubic spinel and zirconia alloy. The zirconia alloy in the shell is cubic structure or a mixture of cubic and monoclinic structures. This contrasts with the results in which the shell is tetragonal zirconia with cubic spinel (Al₂ O₃ from about 5 to about 50 wt. %) and cubic zirconia with cubic spinel (Al₂ O₃ less than about 5 wt. %).

Prior to observing the results of the Examples and Comparative Examples, the inventors had thought that they would be able to provide an explanation for conversion methods having any relative percentages of zirconia alloy and alumina. The inventors had expected results to be in accord with the concepts that the formation of cubic spinel is highly favored thermodynamically over the conversion of tetragonal zirconia to cubic zirconia and that the mechanism of action follows alumina concentration.

What has been discovered by the inventors is that, surprisingly, if the concentration of alumina in the blank is from about 50 weight percent (relative to the total weight of zirconia and alumina) to about 75 weight percent, then the method of the invention produces an article having a shell that is cubic spinel and tetragonal zirconia and a core that is alumina and tetragonal zirconia. During sintering, dopant, in effect, diffuses past tetragonal zirconia until all of the dopant has contacted and reacted, i.e. "partitioned", with alumina. In contrast, if the concentration of alumina in the blank is less than about 5 weight percent or greater than about 75 weight percent, then the method of the invention produces an article that has a shell that is predominantly composed of cubic spinel and cubic zirconia or cubic and monoclinic zirconia and a core that is alumina and tetragonal zirconia. By predominantly it is meant that the amount of phases present is greater than or equal to 99.5%. During sintering, dopant does not, in effect, diffuse past tetragonal zirconia until all of the dopant has contacted and reacted with alumina; but rather reacts with alumina and tetragonal zirconia in the same vicinity, leaving alumina deeper within the blank unreacted.

These results are not compatible with a simple mechanism of action based on concentration alone. The results seen are compatible with a mechanism of action based upon an unpredictable alignment of several competing factors, such as rate of diffusion of dopant during sintering.

The particular method of compacting the powder is not critical. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the alumina or particulate mixture is cold compacted to provide an unsintered blank, which is also referred to herein as a "green preform". The terms "cold compaction" and the like refer to compression of the particulate mixture at a temperature below glass transition or decomposition temperature of the binder. The green preform can be produced by such methods as cold uniaxial pressing, cold isostatic pressing, or cold extrusion. The particulate mixture is preferably subjected to uniform compacting forces in order to provide a blank 106 which has a uniform density.

A preferred compacting device that achieves uniform compacting forces is a floating mold die press 10, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,290,332 and as shown in FIG. 2. Die press comprises fixed platform 12 and movable platform 14 mounted on supports 16. Movable platform 14 is driven by hydraulic means (not illustrated) and supports mold and die assembly 18. FIG. 3 further illustrates assembly 18 as comprising plates 20,22, which are slideably mounted on rods 24. Die sets 26,28 are mounted respectively on plates 20,22. Center platen 30 is mounted by spacer plates 32 on plate 22, and together with die sets 26,28 defines cavity 34 therebetween. The particulate mixture is compacted by first placing a selected volume in cavity 34. Platform 14 is then moved in the direction illustrated by the direction arrow in FIG. 2 so that plate 20 contacts platform 12 with a hydraulic pressure in the above described range, forcing plate 22 toward plate 20 and thereby compacting the powder to form the blank or green preform. The compaction forces exerted on the powder are substantially uniform because plates 20,22 are each free to move on rods 24, resulting in a blank having a uniform density.

Mold and die assembly 18 should have dimensionally close tolerances in order to minimize or eliminate the need for post-sintering machining of working surfaces of the finished ceramic article. For example, compaction surfaces 44,46 of respective die sets 26,28 can be parallel with a maximum design deviation from parallel of plus or minus 0.00005 inches. Compaction surfaces 48,50 of center platen 30 can be perpendicular to surfaces 44,46 and have a maximum design deviation from perpendicularity of plus or minus 0.00005 inches. The fill ratio should be established to produce a blank of a desired dimension, which after sintering will result in a ceramic of the final desired dimension. "Fill ratio" is the ratio of the height of cavity 34 taken along the axis of movement of platform 14 with platform 14 in its initial, lowermost position, to the height of the green part formed in cavity 34 taken along the axis of compaction of the powder in cavity 34. In other words, such height of the green preform also equals the distance between compaction surfaces 44,46 of mold and die assembly 18 at the final end-of-compacting position.

In a preferred method of the invention, the powder is cold compacted to provide a "green preform", which has a "green" density that is substantially less than the final sintered density of the ceramic article 108. The final sintered density of the shell 110 differs slightly from the final sintered density of the core 112, however, except for very small articles 108, this difference can be ignored and final sintered density can be considered to equal the density of the core after sintering. It is preferred that the green density be between about 40 and about 65 percent of the final sintered density, or more preferably be about 60 percent of the final sintered density.

For a particular powder distribution, the green density is largely dependent upon the compaction pressure and the fill ratio. Preferred compaction pressures in the methods of the invention are about 10,000-30,000 psi (69-207 MPa). A more preferred compaction pressure is about 15,000 psi (about 100 MPa). The fill ratio is maintained at from about 2.5 to 1 to about 3.5 to 1. A preferred fill ratio is about 3.0 to 1. Compaction time can be readily determined by the operator depending upon the compaction pressure selected. Compaction time, for example, can be in the range of from about 60 seconds to about 10 seconds for compaction pressures in the range of about 12,000 psi to about 18,000 psi, respectively. For a compaction pressure of 15,000 psi (100 MPa), the compaction time can be 30 seconds. It is well known that the compaction pressure and time selected by the operator can be dependent upon the size of the finished part 108. Generally, as the part size increases, compaction trifle is increased.

Sintering provided in the methods of the invention is unlike previous alumina ceramic sintering procedures. It is ordinary practice in previous sintering procedures to place a blank upon a plate of ZrO₂ or Al₂ O₃ during sintering. The ceramic parts produced by those procedures remain alumina or alumina and tetragonal structure zirconia ahoy both on the shell and within the part. In the method of U.S. Pat. No. 5,290,332, zirconia alloy ceramic blanks are sintered in the presence of a "dopant" selected from: MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, Sc₂ O₃ and CeO₂ and other rare earth oxides. These materials represent "alloying agents", that is, oxides which can be combined with ZrO₂ to provide a zirconia alloy, in particular a zirconia alloy having a tetragonal crystal structure at room temperature and pressure. In the method of U.S. Pat. No. 5,290,332; the sintering step causes the zirconia alloy shell of the article to change from tetragonal phase to cubic phase. In the method of Continuation-in-Part of U.S. patent application No. 07/994,818, as discussed above, sintering a blank containing alumina and tetragonal zirconia causes the shell of the article to change to spinel and tetragonal zirconia or spinel and cubic zirconia, depending upon the alumina concentration. It is a novel and surprising feature of the methods of the invention that the shell of the article produced is cubic spinel and cubic (or cubic and monoclinic) zirconia.

In the sintering of the methods of the invention, the dopant oxide selected from: MgO, FeO, ZnO, CoO, NiO, and MnO, and combination thereof, is in contact with the blank. It is preferred that the sintering result in a ceramic article (108) having a "full" or nearly theoretical density, and it is more preferred that the density of the ceramic article 108 be from about 99.5 to about 99.9 percent of theoretical density. Sintering is conducted in air or other oxygen containing atmosphere.

The methods of the invention are not limited to any particular sintering pressure and temperature conditions. Sintering can be performed at atmospheric pressure or alternatively a higher pressure can be used during all or part of the sintering to reduce porosity. The sintering is continued for a sufficient time period for the shell of the article being sintered to reach a thermodynamic equilibrium structure. An example of a useful range of elevated sintering pressures is from about 69 MPa to about 207 MPa, or more preferably about 100-103 MPa. An example of a useful range of sintering temperatures is from about 1400° to about 1600° C., or more preferably about 1500° C. An example of a useful range of sintering times is from about 1 hour to about 3 hours or more preferably about 2 hours. In a particular embodiment of the methods of the invention, the sintering peak temperature is 1500° C. and that temperature is maintained for about 2 hours.

It is preferred that the sintered blank be slowly heated to sintering temperature and slowly cooled so as to avoid undesirable dimensional changes and crack development. In an embodiment of the invention having a preferred sintering temperature of 1500° C., preferred temperature ramps during heating are: about 0.3° C./minute for room temperature to about 300° C., about 0.1° C./minute for about 300° C. to about 400° C., about 0.4° C./minute for about 400° C. to about 600° C., and about 1.5° C./minute for about 600° C. to about 1500° C. Preferred temperature ramps during cooling are: about 2° C./minute for about 1500° C. to about 800° C. and about 1.6° C./minute for about 800° C. to room temperature.

The exact manner in which the dopant is in contact with the blank during sintering is not critical, however, the "shell", as that term is used herein, is limited to those areas of the blank in contact with the dopant during sintering. For example, a cubic spinel and zirconia alloy shell can be readily produced by the methods of the invention on a portion of the overall surface of an article. It is not critical that the dopant be in contact with the blank during initial sintering, that is, sintering which does not result in an increase in density to full density.

The Comparative Example illustrates an alternative for providing contact between the blank and the dopant during sintering. In Comparative Example, the blank rested on an alumina plate during sintering.

The methods of the invention are applicable to the production of a variety of articles, particularly cutting tools and abrasion and wear resistant parts, in that many tools have a longer service life if the working surface is a hard cast shell overlying a tough core. Examples of tools include slitter knives, punches and dies; for cloth, cardboard, metal, polymeric materials and paper coated with abrasive material such as silver halides and the like. FIG. 4 illustrates a ceramic perforator 38 having cutting edge 40 mounted on mounting shank 42. Punch can be mounted by shank 42 on any typical punch assembly, such as a reciprocating punch or a rotary punch upon which can be mounted a plurality of punches 36. The case of perforator 38 can be limited to cutting edge 40 or can encompass the entire outside of perforator.

The configuration of articles prepared by the methods of the invention is limited by the requirements of cold compaction and sintering; for example, mold size and shape and sintering oven size and shape; but is not believed to be subject to other limitations. The methods and articles of the invention are not limited to discrete ceramic items, thus the terms blank and ceramic article and the like, used herein can also refer to portions of larger items.

The following Comparative Example is presented for a further understanding of the invention:

COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE 1

Zirconia alloy having 3 mole percent Y₂ O₃ was obtained as a prepared alloy powder from Z-TECH Corporation, Bow, N.H. The alloy powder had an agglomerate size range from 30 micrometers to 60 micrometers, an average agglomerate size of 50 micrometers, a grain size range from 0.1 micrometer to 0.6 micrometer, an average grain size of 0.3 micrometers, and a moisture content of 0.5 percent by volume. Polyvinyl alcohol in the amount of 4 percent by volume of the green part was added to the zirconia alloy powder as a binder.

Alumina having an agglomerate size range from 30 micrometers to 60 micrometers, an average agglomerate size of 50 micrometers, a grain size range from 0.1 micrometer to 0.6 micrometer, an average grain size of 0.3 micrometers, and a moisture content of 0.5 percent by volume was thoroughly mixed with the zirconia alloy-binder premix by ball milling. The resulting particulate mixture was compacted in the floating mold die press above described, at a compacting pressure of 15,000 psi (100 MPa) for 30 seconds and with a fill ratio of about 3.0, to compact the powder into a blank. Blanks were placed on an alumina plate during sintering and were sintered to full density by heating the green part at 150° C. for 2 hours; and then sequentially cooling the part from 1500° C. to 800° C. at a rate of 2° C./minute, from 800° C. to room temperature at a rate of 1.6° C./minute. Dimensional shrinkage was uniform throughout the ceramic article to within 0.001 percent.

X-ray diffraction analysis was performed using an X-ray diffractometer manufactured by Rigaku Corp. Coupled angle diffraction was used to detect the phases present at the core. Glancing angle diffraction was used to detect phases present at the shell. Tetragonal zirconia alloy and α-alumina were detected in both shell and core.

Knoop indentation hardness was measured for indicated Comparative Examples and Examples as a function of load using a Tukon Microhardness Tester, Model #300 FM/DF. All measurements were made on flat and smooth (RMS less than 40 microns) surfaces. Nominal indentation load was 500 gf and an average was taken of at least ten indentation readings. Hardness values measured by Knoop indentation for the articles of Comparative Example 1 were in the range 12-13 GPa.

X-ray diffraction of the core and shell of the sintered block was found to be 100% tetragonal in nature.

The following Examples are presented for a further understanding of the invention:

EXAMPLES 1-3

The following three working examples are based on a series of alumina-zirconia composites where alumina concentration lies between 50 and 75 weight percent. This composition range is subdivided into three equi-composition ranges of (1) 56.25 weight percent, (2) 62.50 weight percent and (3) 68.75 weight percent of Al₂ O₃ (the remainder being 3 mole percent Y₂ O₃ stabilized zirconia).

WORKING EXAMPLE

All the above composites were compacted and sintered as that of the sample in the comparative example. The coupled x-ray diffraction of the core of all the sintered blocks indicated the presence of major phases as tetragonal zirconia and alpha-Al₂ O₃ and the minor phase being monoclinic zirconia.

The glancing angle (0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 deg) x-ray diffraction of the shells of the above samples indicated the presence of similar phases.

All three samples mentioned above are compacted and sintered in the way described above but placed on a MgO plate or sintered by having in contact with MgO powders in one face of the block. The coupled x-ray scans of the samples indicated the major phases being both tetragonal and cubic zirconia (overlap of these two phases appear to be present, though tetragonal phase is the dominant one. The alumina-zirconium ceramic composite of the core is predominantly tetragonal. As the sintering process continues, MgO diffuses further in the core and its concentration increases and the crystal structure of the core transforms from tetragonal to a mixture of tetragonal and cubic to cubic. The x-ray diffraction effects will indicate the presence of both tetragonal and cubic phases, and also alpha-Al₂ O₃. The minor phases in the core of these samples were monoclinic zirconia, MgAl₂ O₄ spinel, and beta-Al₂ O₃.

The glancing angle x-ray diffraction of the shell of the above samples indicate that the major phase is cubic zirconia; the moderate phases are alpha-Al₂ O₃ and MgAl₂ O₄ spinel; the minor phases are monoclinic zirconia and beta-Al₂ O₃.

It is an advantageous feature of at least some embodiments of the invention that a method is provided for producing an article having a core that is predominantly zirconia and alumina and a shell that is predominantly a mixture of zirconia and cubic spinel.

While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described herein for purposes of illustration, the protection afforded by any patent which may issue upon this application is not strictly limited to a disclosed embodiment; but rather extends to all modifications and arrangements which fall fairly within the scope of the claims which are appended hereto. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method for preparing an alumina ceramic article comprising:compacting a mixture of a first concentration of particulate aluminum oxide and a second concentration of particulate zirconium oxide alloy, said zirconium oxide alloy consisting essentially of zirconium oxide and a secondary oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, CeO₂, Sc₂ O₃ rare earth oxides, and combinations of these secondary oxides; wherein zirconium oxide alloy has a concentration of said secondary oxide of, in the case of Y₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent; in the case of MgO, about 0.1 to about 1.0 mole percent, in the case of CeO₂, about 0.5 to about 15 mole percent, in the case of Sc₂ O₃, about 0.5 to about 7.0 mole percent and in the case of CaO from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent, relative to the total of said zirconium oxide alloy, said compacting further comprising forming a blank; providing contact between said blank and a dopant oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, ZnO, FeO, CoO, NiO, and MnO, said contact being subsequent to said forming of said blank; and sintering said blank in contact with said dopant oxide, said sintering further comprising diffusing said dopant oxide into the shell of said blank, converting said aluminum oxide particles in said shell into cubic spinel, and converting said zirconium oxide alloy particles in said shell from a tetragonal crystal structure to cubic and monoclinic crystal structures; wherein said first concentration is from 50 weight percent of the total of the first and second concentrations to 75 weight percent of the total of said first and second concentrations, and wherein said first concentration is sufficient to prevent retention of said zirconium oxide alloy particles in said shell in a predominantly tetragonal crystal structure; whereby said prepared ceramic article has a core consisting essentially of sintered particles of (1) said zirconium oxide alloy in a tetragonal crystal structure and (2) aluminum oxide, and a shell consisting essentially of sintered particles of (a) zirconium oxide alloy in non-tetragonal crystal structures and (b) cubic spinel.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein said first concentration is sufficient to convert said zirconium oxide alloy particles in said shell from tetragonal crystal structure to predominantly cubic and monoclinic crystal structures;whereby said prepared ceramic article has a core consisting essentially of sintered particles of (1) said zirconium oxide alloy in a tetragonal crystal structure and (2) aluminum oxide, and a shell consisting essentially of sintered particles of (a) zirconium oxide alloy in cubic and a minor amount of zirconia in monoclinic crystal structures and (b) cubic spinel.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein said sintering is at a temperature from about 1400° C. to about 1600° C.
 4. The method of claim 1 wherein said sintering is at a temperature of about 1500° C.
 5. The method of claim 1 wherein said secondary oxide comprises Y₂ O₃.
 6. The method of claim 1 wherein the particulate zirconium oxide alloy has a concentration of secondary oxide selected from the group consisting of MgO, CaO, Y₂ O₃, Sc₂ O₃, and CeO₂ of from about 0.1 to about 1.0 mole percent, from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent, from about 0.5 to about 5 mole percent, from about 0.5 to about 7.0 mole percent, and from about 0.5 to about 15 mole percent, respectively, relative to the total of said zirconium alloy oxides. 